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Bright Sheng is respected as one of the foremost composers of our time,
whose stage, orchestral, chamber and vocal works are performed
regularly throughout North America, Europe and Asia. Sheng’s music is
noted for its lyrical and limpid melodies, a Shostakovich sense of breath
in music phrases, a Bartokian sense of rhythmic propulsion, and
dramatic and theatrical gestures. Many of Sheng’s works has strong
Chinese and Asian influences, a result of his diligent study of Asian
musical cultures for over three decades. He was proclaimed by the
MacArthur Foundation in 2001 as “an innovative composer who merges
diverse musical customs in works that transcend conventional aesthetic
boundaries.” The Foundation predicts that “Bright Sheng will continue to
be an important leader in exploring and bridging musical traditions.”
Born in December, 1955, in Shanghai, Sheng began studying the piano
with his mother at age four. During China’s infamous Cultural
Revolution, at fifteen he was sent to Qinghai—a Chinese province
bordering Tibet—where for seven years he performed as a pianist and
percussionist in the provincial music and dance theater, and studied folk
music of the region. When China’s universities reopened in 1978, he was
among the first students admitted to the Shanghai Conservatory of
Music where he studied composition from 1978-82. He moved to New
York City in 1982; and, at Queens College, CUNY, he studied
composition with George Perle and Hugo Weisgall, Schenkerian analysis
with Carl Schachter, and earned his MA in 1984. He earned his DMA in
1993 from Columbia University where he studied composition with Chou
Wen-Chung, Jack Beeson and Mario Davidovsky. During that period, in
1985, as a student at Tanglewood Music Center he met Leonard
Bernstein who later became his mentor. Sheng studied composition and
conducting with Bernstein privately until Bernstein’s passing in 1990.
During his student years, Sheng’s talent already emerged of its own
accord, receiving many honors in China, as well as three fellowships
from the National Endowment for the Arts, a Charles Ives Scholarship
Award from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, and
the fellowships and awards from the Guggenheim, Jerome, Naumberg,
and Rockefeller foundations.
In 1999, at the invitation of President Clinton, Sheng received a special
commission from the White House to create a new work honoring the
visiting Chinese Premiere Zhu, Rongji. The resulting Three Songs for Pipa
and Cello was premiered by Wu Man and Yo Yo Ma during the state
dinner hosted by the Clintons. In 2001, Sheng received the MacArthur
Foundation Fellowship and the American Award in Music from the
American Academy of Arts and Letters, and an ASCAP Achievement
Award the following year.
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Sheng’s works is well known for their dramatic style and historical
signification. Two of his major orchestral works H’un: In Memoriam 196676 (1988) and Naking! Nanking!—a Threnody for Pipa and Orchestra
(2000), and his opera Madam Mao (2003) were indeed inspired by events
in recent Chinese history. H’un, commissioned and premiered in 1988 by
the New York Chamber Symphony, is Sheng’s landmark portrait of the
Chinese Culture Revolution. Kurt Masur and the New York Philharmonic
performed H’un in six cities on their 1993 European tour after giving
performances in New York City and in Washington DC. It established
Sheng’s reputation as a composer. H’un was subsequently performed by
the Chicago Symphony, the Cleveland Orchestra, the Tokyo
Philharmonic and many other major orchestras around the world.
Within the first week of 2000, in Hamburg, Naking! Nanking! was
commissioned and premiered by Christoph Eschenbach and the
Northern German Radio Symphony, as well as Red Silk Dance, a
capriccio for piano and orchestra, commissioned and premiered by the
Boston Symphony with soloist Emanuel Ax and conductor Robert Spano.
In 2001 Red Silk Dance had its New York premiere by the New York
Philharmonic. All at the same time with Sheng’s many other important
orchestra works frequently performed world wide, including Tibetan
Swing (2002), Flute Moon (1999), Spring Dreams (1998), Postcards (1997),
and China Dreams (1995).
Within the first week of 2000, in Hamburg, Naking! Nanking! was
commissioned and premiered by Christoph Eschenbach and the
Northern German Radio Symphony, as well as Red Silk Dance, a
capriccio for piano and orchestra, commissioned and premiered by the
Boston Symphony with soloist Emanuel Ax and conductor Robert Spano.
In 2001 Red Silk Dance had its New York premiere by the New York
Philharmonic. All at the same time with Sheng’s many other important
orchestra works frequently performed world wide, including Tibetan
Swing (2002), Flute Moon (1999), Spring Dreams (1998), Postcards (1997),
and China Dreams (1995).
In 2003 Carnegie Hall presented a Sheng portrait concert in its “Making
Music” series with the principles from the New York Philharmonic and
the Shanghai Quartet. In the same week the New York Philharmonic
premiered its commissioned work, Song and Dance of Tears—a
quadruple concerto for cello, piano, pipa and sheng, featuring soloists
Yo-Yo Ma and Emanuel Ax, Wuman and Wutong, conducted by David
Zinman. Some of the basic music materials came from Sheng’s first Silk
Road cultural journey embarked in the summer of 2000 (Sheng also
served as the artistic advisor for Yo-Yo Ma’s Silk Road Project from 1998
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to 2003). During the two-month trip, Sheng followed the path of Zhang
Qian, the first Chinese traveler in 138 BC, on the Silk Road in northwest
China from Changan (old capital of China, now Xian) to Kashgar,
collected traditional, folk music and sound samples. In 2008, Bright
Sheng continued the Silk Road project, a field research trip traveling
through part of the southern route of the Silk Road, including Vietnam
and southern China. (To experience the trip with Bright Sheng, please
visit www.brightsheng.com)
In 2004 Sheng enjoyed a successful premiere of Phoenix, commissioned
by the Seattle Symphony for its centennial celebration tour to Carnegie
Hall with soprano Jane Eaglen and Gerard Schwarz conducting. The
work was based on Hans Christian Andersen’s poem/prose with the
same title and co-commissioned by the Danish National Radio Symphony
for Andersen’s bicentennial birthday. The following year Phoenix had its
Danish premiere in Copenhagen and the orchestra took it on its Asian
tour in Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong. In 2007 Phoenix was
conducted by Charles Dutoit with the Philadelphia Orchestra at the
Saratoga Spring.
In 2007, at the request of a commission by the Shanghai Conservatory of
Music, Sheng’s alma mater, Sheng wrote Shanghai Overture in
celebration of the eightieth year of its founding. He also was among the
composers chosen by the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games Committee to
composer music for the opening ceremony.
Enjoying being one of the highly successful orchestral composers, Sheng
has also demonstrated his gift in the theater. From 1989 to 1992 Sheng
served as the Composer-in-Residence at the Lyric Opera of Chicago. The
experience helped shape Sheng as an operatic composer. In collaboration
with librettist Andrew Porter, Sheng created his first opera The Song of
Majnun (1992)—a one-act of a Persian ‘Romeo and Juliet’ story. The
opera subsequently received five other productions nationwide and was
recorded by the Houston Grand Opera on the Delos label in 1997.
Sheng’s natural talent in opera was further proven by two other major
stage works, The Silver River and Madam Mao. A two-act opera, Madam
Mao, commissioned and premiered by the Santa Fe Opera in 2003,
portrays Jiang Qing, Chairman Mao’s repressed, vengeful wife who was
one of the leading architects of the Chinese Cultural Revolution. Set to a
libretto by the stage director Colin Graham, the work garnered worldwide
acclaim. Said The New York Times, “Sheng’s [style] is an exquisite blend
of the musical East and West… the orchestra writing is brilliant” Michael
Kennedy of the Telegraph (London) called it “…extraordinary music and a
riveting evening in the theater.” The multi-cultural music theater work
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The Silver River (co-commissioned by the Kennedy Center for the
Performing Arts, the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, The
Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival, Chamber Music Northwest in
Portland, OR.), with a libretto by the noted playwright David Henry
Hwang, received a visually stunning production staged by Ong Keng Sen,
the world renowned Singaporean director. The production was cocommissioned with the Prince Music Theater in Philadelphia and
premiered by the Spoleto festival, USA, in 2000. The Silver River has
been performed subsequently in Philadelphia, in Singapore by Theaters
Works, and it was a highlight of the Lincoln Center Festival in 2002. It
was presented by the University Music Society at University of Michigan
in 2007. Currently, with co-librettist David Henry Hwang, Sheng is
working on a new opera The Dream of Red Chamber, commissioned by
the San Francisco Opera, to be premiered in the fall of 2016.
From 2006-2008 Sheng was appointed as the first Composer-inResidence for the New York City Ballet, where he collaborated with the
noted choreographer Christopher Wheeldon on a new ballet The
Nightingale and the Rose, one of the two commissioned works by the
NYCB. The Nightingale and the Rose was well received by the public and
the critics alike. In 2011, New York City Ballet will premiere Just Dance,
a new ballet from Sheng in collaboration with Peter Martins, its Ballet
Master in Chief. Sheng’s music was admired by other well-known
choreographers as well. In 2002, Helgi Tomasson, the Artistic Director of
the San Francisco Ballet compiled three of Sheng’s extant pieces and
premiered a new ballet entitled Chi-Lin in San Francisco in February,
2002, with subsequent touring performances in New York City and the
Kennedy Center. Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux, the Artistic Director at the
North Carolina Dance Theater, choreographed Sheng’s Four Movements
for Piano Trio in 1996 entitled 'Zoomin’. In 2006, as part of the NYCB’s
Diamond Project, Bonnefoux again choreographed two orchestra works of
Sheng Flute Moon and Two Poems from Sung Dynasty and premiered at
the New York City Ballet entitled Two Birds with the Wings of One.
Sheng is also one of the most favored living chamber music composers.
Sheng has worked with the Takasc Quartet, the Emerson Quartet, the
Shanghai Quartet, the St. Petersburg String Quartet, the Daedalus
Quartet, and many others. Among Sheng’s chamber music works that
have been enjoying frequent world wide performances are Four
Movements for Piano Trio, Tibetan Dance, Srting Quartet #3, String Quartet
#4, Seven Tunes Heard in China, The Stream Flows, and Concertino for
Clarinet and String Quartet (1994). In 2007, Sheng’s String Quartet #5
was commissioned and premiered by the Emerson Quartet. It soon
became a highlight of the quartet’s concerts in U.S. and Europe.
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Sheng has collaborated with many distinguished conductors including
Leonard Bernstein, Christoph Eschenbach, Kurt Masur, Leonard Slatkin,
Charles Dutoit, Gerald Schwarz, David Zinman, Neeme Järvi, David
Robertson, Hugh Wolff, Robert Spano, Marin Alsop, Bramwell Tovey, Eiji
Oue, Jahja Lin, John Fiore, Jeffery Kahane, Shui Lan, Thomas Dasgaard,
En Shao, Samuel Wong, Sakari Oramo, Muhai Tang, Maxim Valdes,
Arthur Fagen, Carl St. Clair, Richard Buckley, Kazuyoshi Akiyama, Xian
Zhang, David Loebel, Andre Raphel Smith, Jose-Luis Novo, Jonathan
McPhee; and distinguished performers including Yo Yo Ma, Emanuel Ax,
Peter Serkin, Yefim Brofman, Evelyn Glennie, Gil Shaham, Lynn Harrell,
Truls Mork, Richard Stoltzman, Cho-Liang Lin, Edgar Meyer, Andre
Schub, Colin Currie, David Shifrin, Chantal Juliet, Hai Ye Ni, Jane
Eaglen, Elisabeth Futral, Joseph Kaiser, Lauren Flanigan, Lisa Saffer.
Sheng’s music has been programmed by almost every important
orchestra in the world.
Sheng’s music has been recorded on Sony Classical, BIS, Delos, Koch
International, New World, Telarc and Naxos labels. 2009 saw three new
discs of Sheng’s music released, four on Naxos: Red Silk Dance (Sheng as
the piano soloist), Phoenix, Tibetan Swing, H’un (second recording), and
Spring Dreams, Three Fantasies, Tibetan Dance, and on Telarc Never Far
Away, The Nightingale and the Rose, Tibetan Love Song and Swing,
Shanghai Overture.
Among the published articles by Bright Sheng, there are Melodic
Migration along the Silk Road-Northwest China (2002); The Love Songs of
Qinghai (1995), both published by Asian Art & Culture, Sackler Gallery
of the Smithsonian Institution; Bartok, the Chinese Composer (1998),
published by Freer Gallery of the Smithsonian Institution; H’un
(Lacerations): in Memoriam 1966-1976 for Orchestra (1995, a selfanalysis) by Perspectives of New Music; and Leonard Bernstein: Portrait
of the Artist by a Young Man (1989) by Ear Magazine of New Music.
Sheng has also undertaken the translations of Brahms’ Ein Deutsches
Requiem, from German to Chinese, in 1996.
In addition to the Lyric Opera of Chicago and New York City Ballet,
Sheng has served as composer-in-residences to the Seattle Symphony
Orchestra (1992-95 and 2000-01) the Tanglewood Music Center (2001,
where he also taught from 2001 through 2006), the Washington
Performing Arts Society (2001-02), the Mannes College of Music (200203), the Atlantic Center for the Arts (2002). Sheng also participated the
numerals summer festivals as their composer-in-residence, including La
Jolla Chamber Music Summerfest (1993 and 2004), Santa Fe chamber
Music Festival (1992, 1993, 1997), Bowdoin International Summer
Festival (1994-96, and 2005), and Brevard Music Center (2003-04).
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Sheng also maintains an active career as a conductor and concert
pianist. As a guest conductor, he has appeared with some of the world's
most important orchestras such as the San Francisco Symphony, The
Detroit Symphony, The Seattle Symphony, the New York Chamber
Symphony, The St. Petersburg Philharmonic, The Dortmund
Philharmonic, the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra, the Hong Kong
Chinese Orchestra, the China National Symphony, among others; and
his conducting repertoire includes works by Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms,
Berlioz, Mahler, Debussy, Ravel, Stravinsky, Bartok, Shostakovich,
Prokofiev, as well as Aaron Copland and John Adams. As a frequent
artistic director and advisor he has appeared at many of the world’s most
prestigious music centers and institutions including Carnegie Hall,
Lincoln Center, Kennedy Center, Tanglewood Music Center, among
others.
As a pianist, Sheng has performed with the Seattle Symphony Orchestra,
the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra, at Tanglewood Music Center,
Saratoga Spring, Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, Kennedy
Center, Spoleto USA Festival, Eastern Music Festival and many others.
During the 2008-09 season, co-commissioned by four institutions in U.S.
and feathering soloist Yolanda Kondonasis, Bright Sheng’s harp concerto
Never Far Away was world premiered by the San Diego Symphony (Jahja
Lin conducting), followed by the Dallas Symphony (Leonard Slatkin
conducting), the Grand Rapids Symphony (Bright Sheng conducting),
and Oberlin Conservatory Orchestra.
This season Bright Sheng was one of the feature composers at the
Chinese Festival presented by Carnegie Hall. Sheng’s highlights of 2010,
include a performance and recording of Flute Moon by Copenhagen
Philharmonic of Denmark in April. Phoenix by the Philadelphia Orchestra
in May, a concert premiere of his ballet score Just Dance at Eastern
Music Festival, conducted by Gerald Schwarz in July, Concerto for
Orchestra--Zodiac Tales is scheduled to be premiered in November by the
Detroit Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Leonard Slatkin, Northern
Lights for violoncello and piano will receive a premiere in Europe, a U.S.
premiere at La Jolla Chamber Music Society in August by Lynn Harrell,
and a New York premiere by Alisa Weilerstein and Inon Barnatan at The
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center in November.
Since 2011, he has been the Founder and Artistic Director The Intimacy
of Creativity—The Bright Sheng Partnership: Composers Meet Performers
in Hong Kong, an annual two-week workshop with new approach to
creativity.
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Sheng has been teaching composition at the University of Michigan since
1995, where he is the Leonard Bernstein Distinguished University
Professor of Music.
Bright Sheng’s music is published exclusively by G.Schirmer. For more
information at www.brightsheng.com
Last Update 08/2013
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